2010/2/9 Dr. David Kirkby :
> I can sort of understand that, though I would have expected the restriction
> to only apply to the $HOME/.ssh directory, which should not even be readable
> by your group.
I stumbled into this trap at a previous time and it took me several hours and
debugging. The pr
2010/2/8 Dr. David Kirkby :
> The ssh keys are important and has nothing to do with http, or even https.
Sure. I'm so far familiar with Linux and different protokolls.
> The basic idea is that the server process should run as one user, and the
> data be stored as a second user. This adds some me
2010/2/5 William Stein :
> If you type "sage" on the command line, what happens?
Sorry, I forgot to mention: If I start sage from command line
as the user 'sageuser' (which installed sage) I just get the
prompt and calculations work perfectly as expected.
If I start as a different system user I g
2010/2/5 Dr. David Kirkby :
>
> Have you created the account called 'sageuser'?
Yes. The user 'sageuser' is actually the user which was used to install
Sage to make sure he has all needed permissions. Also the command
sage notebook.py
is running by sageuser.
> Can you log in via ssh to tha
Hi,
I'm new to sage. I installed sage vie downloading the source code and
running make
on a Debian GNU/Linux Lenny system. I tested the command line version of sage
as well as running the testsuite successfully. Because I would like
to run sage as
a web service in our local network I created a